The invention relates to a turbomachine blade made of composite material and presenting a root with a bulb-shaped end suitable for engaging in a slot of a rotor disk. In characteristic manner, the end of the root of the blade is provided, beside one of its front faces, with a projecting portion having two symmetrical fins about the axial midplane of the root, each fin having a bearing face suitable for limiting tilting of the blade relative to the rotor disk about the axial direction.
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1. A turbomachine blade made of composite material, in which a long dimension defines a radial direction, the blade including a root extending in an axial direction, with a bulb-shaped end suitable for engaging in a slot of a rotor disk and radially locking the root in the slot,
wherein the bulb-shaped end of the root of the blade includes a first enlarged portion and a second projecting portion,
wherein the second projecting portion is beside a front face of the first enlarged portion, and extends in a transverse direction,
wherein the second projecting portion includes two fins that are symmetrical relative to an axial midplane of the root and each fin has a bearing face suitable for limiting tilting of the blade relative to the rotor disk about the axial direction,
wherein a transverse extent of the projecting portion between free ends of the two fins is greater than a greatest distance between two side faces of the enlarged portion of the root of the blade, and
wherein the root of the blade includes an insert having a portion that forms at least a part of the second projecting portion or that constitutes the second projecting portion.
2. A turbomachine blade according to
3. A turbomachine blade according to
4. A turbomachine blade according to
5. A turbomachine blade according to
6. A turbomachine blade according to
7. A turbomachine blade according to
8. A turbomachine blade according to
9. A turbomachine rotor comprising blades according to
10. A rotor according to
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The invention relates to the general field of moving wheels or rotors for a gas turbine, and particularly but not exclusively to low pressure turbine rotors of an aviation turbomachine.
The low pressure turbine of an aviation turbomachine is made up of a plurality of stages, each stage including a nozzle (i.e. a grid of stationary guide vanes) and a rotor wheel placed behind the nozzle.
Typically, a low pressure turbine rotor is made up of a rotor disk provided at its periphery with slots in which the roots of the blades are engaged. An annular plate fastened to the rotor disk serves to hold the blades axially on the disk.
At present, it is common practice to replace the metal blades of such a rotor with blades that are made of composite material, while the rotor disk continues to be made of metal.
The use of a composite material for making blades is justified by the very good behavior of composite materials at the high temperatures to which blades are subjected, and also to their lower density (where composite materials present a density that is divided by about 3.5 relative to the density of the metal).
Nevertheless, having recourse to composite materials for making the blades of a gas turbine rotor wheel raises the problem of holding them in the slots of the disks. In operation, differences of expansion between the disk (made of metal) and the blades (made of composite material, in particular ceramic matrix composite (CMC) material) can give rise to contact being lost at the bearing surfaces of the blade roots. Under such circumstances, this loss of contact can lead to a blade tilting in the slot about a direction that is parallel to the central axis of symmetry of the turbomachine.
It is known to have recourse to a spacer placed between the bottom of the slot and the inner face of the blade root.
Document FR 2 918 129 provides for having recourse to a spacer of elastically deformable material with a longitudinal segment presenting a transverse profile of arcuate shape.
Nevertheless, such a spacer does not always manage to oppose sufficiently the above-mentioned tilting movements between the blade root and the corresponding slot.
In addition, having recourse to a spacer presents several drawbacks, including the fact of being expensive and of requiring each spacer to be made to measure, which is not compatible with mass production. It is necessary to adapt and fit the dimensions of each spacer to its future location as a function of the shape presented by the pair constituted by the slot and the blade root that is associated therewith. In addition, there is a risk of assembly errors, with spacers being interchanged, and there is also a problem of spacer traceability being relatively burdensome to manage.
An object of the present invention is to provide a solution that constitutes an alternative to spacers and that enables the drawbacks of the prior art to be overcome.
To this end, the present invention provides a turbomachine blade made of composite material, in which the long dimension defines a radial direction, and that presents a root extending in an axial direction, with a bulb-shaped end suitable for engaging in a slot of a rotor disk, wherein the end of the root of the blade includes an enlarged portion and is provided, beside one of its front faces, with a projecting portion extending in a transverse direction and including two fins that are symmetrical relative to the axial midplane of the root and each of which has a bearing face suitable for limiting tilting of the blade relative to the rotor disk about the axial direction.
In this way, it can be understood that by associating the projecting portion of each blade that forms a projection having two fins extending in the transverse direction of the blade at the location of one of the front faces at the end of the blade root, with the disk, or more precisely with a retaining face of the disk, it is possible to establish contact between these elements in such a manner as to prevent, or at least greatly limit, the above-mentioned tilting.
This solution also presents the additional advantage of further making it possible to achieve standardized mass production and assembly suitable for being industrialized.
The invention also relates to a turbomachine rotor comprising blades as described above and a metal disk that is provided at its periphery with slots extending in an axial direction for receiving the roots of the blades, the disk being provided with a retaining face facing towards the periphery of the disk and against which the bearing faces of the fins of the projecting portion of each blade comes to bear.
In an advantageous arrangement, the retaining face is formed by an annular shoulder facing towards the periphery (outer face) of the disk and placed on one of the front faces of the disk.
Thus, the ends of the fins of the projecting portion bear against the retaining face formed by said annular shoulder facing towards the peripheral (or outer face) of the disk. It should be observed that in order to ensure contact between the projecting portion of each blade and said annular shoulder, the shoulder may be continuous or discontinuous. If it is discontinuous, the annular shoulder is made up of segments, each extending over an angular sector that is sufficient to enable both of the fins of the associated projecting portion to bear thereagainst.
The invention also provides a low pressure turbine including at least one blade of the kind described above.
The invention also provides a turbomachine including at least one blade of the kind described above.
Other advantages and characteristics of the invention appear on reading the following description made by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the present application, and unless specified to the contrary, “upstream” and “downstream” are defined relative to the normal flow direction of gas (from upstream to downstream) through the turbomachine. Furthermore, the axis of the turbomachine is the radial axis of symmetry of the turbomachine. The axial direction corresponds to the direction of the turbomachine axis, and a radial direction is a direction perpendicular to said axis and intersecting it. Similarly, an axial plane is a plane containing the axis of the turbomachine, and a radial plane is a plane perpendicular to said axis and intersecting it. The transverse (or circumferential) direction is a direction perpendicular to the axis of the turbomachine that does not intersect said axis. Unless specified to the contrary, the adjectives “axial”, “radial”, and “transverse” (and likewise the adverbs “axially”, “radially”, and “transversely”) are used with reference to the above-specified axial, radial, and transverse directions. Finally, unless specified to the contrary, the adjectives “inner” and “outer” are used relative to a radial direction such that an inner portion or face (i.e. a radially inner portion or face) of an element is closer to the axis of the turbomachine than is an outer portion or face of the same element (i.e. a radially outer portion or face).
Each slot 22 is defined between two solid disk portions 24 forming splines that extend, like the slot 22, in an axial direction, i.e. parallel to the axis X-X′ of the turbomachine.
The openings and the bottoms 22a of the slots 22, and the tops 24a of the splines 24 face towards the periphery or the outer face 25 of the disk 20.
The front face or rim of the disk 20, constituting the upstream front face of the disk 20 in the embodiments described below with reference to
In
In order to co-operate with this retaining face 27, the root 12 of the blade 10 includes a projecting portion 121 that extends in the transverse direction T.
More precisely, in the first embodiment shown in
Furthermore, in the invention, the span or transverse (or circumferential) extent of the projecting portion 121, defined between the free ends of the two fins 121a and 121b is greater than the greatest distance between the two side faces 12c of the enlarged portion 120 of the root 12 of the blade 10. In other words, the enlarged portion goes transversely (i.e. laterally in direction T) in both directions beyond the axial projection of the two side faces 12 of the enlarged portion 120. This difference in width or span is not less than 5% and is preferably not less than 10%.
This serves to prevent, or to limit, any tilting about an axial direction parallel to the central axis X-X′ of symmetry of the turbomachine (arrow 30 in
It can be understood that the bearing faces 122 may be machined so that their locations, shapes, and surface state are appropriate for bearing against the retaining face 27 of the shoulder 26.
The blade 10 is preferably made of composite material, and in an advantageous arrangement the root 12 of the blade 20 includes an insert A having a portion that constitutes the part of the projecting portion 121 or that constitutes the projecting portion 121.
The insert A thus forms an integral part of the root 12 of the blade 10 and it is preferably limited to a relatively short axial extent, beside the (upstream) end of the root 12.
Alternatively (configuration not shown), the insert extends inside the root 12 of the blade 10 over an axial extent that corresponds to more than one-third or even to more than half the axial extent of the root 12, or indeed over the entire axial extent of the root 12.
Furthermore, in the first embodiment shown in
This upside-down Y shape for the projecting portion serves to increases the lever arms generated by contact between the bearing faces 122 and the retaining face 27 of the shoulder 26, thereby minimizing any residual tilting of the root 12 of the blade 10.
The root 12 of the blade generally forms an integral portion of the blade 10 throughout the process of fabricating the blade out of CMC material.
This insert A may also be made of CMC, using a preform or texture that is constituted by interleaved filaments, e.g. three-dimensional weaving, embedded in a ceramic matrix.
Thus, under such circumstances, the insert A comprises a fiber preform and a matrix of ceramic material. This is the configuration that it is advantageous to select for the solutions shown in
Alternatively, the insert A may be made solely out of a ceramic matrix. This is the configuration that is advantageously selected for the solution shown in
In either configuration, the matrix of the insert A is of the same chemical composition as the blade 10 and is in geometrical continuity with the matrix of the blade 10 (the ceramic matrix of the insert A and the matrix of the remainder of the blade 10, including the root 12 should be cast and baked simultaneously, so as to constitute a single matrix).
In the example shown in
In the other variants of the first embodiment (
With reference to
With reference to
Reference is now made to the second embodiment shown in
In the first embodiment (
It should be observed that in the second embodiment (
As can be seen in
For assembly, in a first solution that can be seen in
In a second assembly configuration, as shown in
In the second variant of the second embodiment, as shown in
Furthermore, the span or transverse (or circumferential) extent of the projecting portion 121 between the free ends of the two fins 121a and 121b is greater than the greatest distance between the two side faces 12c of the enlarged portion 120 of the root 12 of the blade 10. Furthermore, in this variant, the two fins 121a and 121b are situated radially at a location above the enlarged portion 120 or bulb, between the bulb and the platform 14. Under such circumstances, the presence of the insert A causes the root 12 of the blade to be longer (axial dimension) than in the configuration where there is no projecting portion 121 but only the enlarged portion 120 or bulb.
In the second variant of the second embodiment, as can be seen in
In
In
In all configurations, the blade 10 is mounted on the disk 20 by inserting its root 12 in the axial direction A into a slot 22, with the front face or upstream face of the disk 20 having the root 12 inserted therein and with the root 12 being caused to slide axially, thereby bringing the enlarged portion into the inside of the slot 22.
It can be understood from the above explanations that the existence of the projecting portion 121 on the blade root 12 and of the annular shoulder 26 and/or the upstream end 24b projecting from the disk 20 does not impede such assembly by axial engagement.
Similarly, in another preferred arrangement, the radial position of the two fins 121a and 121b is offset relative to the radial position of the enlarged portion 120. Thus, in
In other words, the projection of the outline of the enlarged portion 120 in an axial direction (direction A) preferably does not intersect the two fins 121a and 121b.
Soupizon, Jean-Luc, Mateo, Julien, Habarou, Georges, Cordier, Damien
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